Remembering the men and women of the British Commonwealth who lost their lives during the Second World War 1939-1945. Please feel free to contact me and suggest a name for inclusion on this WW2 remembrance blog.

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24 April 2010

4034604 Pte Alfred Welsby, 1st Bn, King's Shropshire LI

4034604 Private Alfred Leslie Welsby of the 1st Battalion, King's Shropshire Light Infantry, died on the 24th April 1943. He was 24 years old, the son of Ernest and Annie Welsby of Frankwell, Shrewsbury, Shropshire. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) indicates that he had been Mentioned in Dispatches.

"In May 1943, the war in North Africa came to an end in Tunisia with the defeat of the Axis powers by a combined Allied force. The campaign began on 8 November 1942, when Commonwealth and American troops made a series of landings in Algeria and Morocco. The Germans responded immediately by sending a force from Sicily to northern Tunisia, which checked the Allied advance east in early December. Meanwhile, in the south, the Axis forces defeated at El Alamein were withdrawing into Tunisia along the coast through Libya, pursued by the Allied Eighth Army. By mid April 1943, the combined Axis force was hemmed into a small corner of north-eastern Tunisia and the Allies were grouped for their final offensive. Many of those buried at Massicault War Cemetery died in the preparation for the final drive to Tunis in April 1943 and in that advance at the beginning of May. The cemetery contains 1,576 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 130 of them unidentified."

At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.